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“May these prayers bring forth a plant which will grow near Vaiśalī,
A plant with flowers flat and blue, a cubit high.
Though inedible, when inhaled through the nose
The five poisonous, destructive emotions will surge,
And all discipline and vinaya precepts
Taught in the eighty-four thousand sections of teachings, and by Gautama,
will deteriorate!”
Here was the result. Some time later, the plant arose from the ground on a land near
Vaiśalī.
There was an evil minister by the name of Raktavarṇa, and a lady called
1
Dharmasāṃkaryā who,
Overwhelmed with desire, lay down in an embrace by that plant.
Raktavarṇa, with foresight, then told Dharmasāṃkaryā:
“You’ll please the great king of the māras if you offer him this plant,
Because you’ll have offered the substance invested with the destruction of
Gautama’s teachings.
Go and see the mara king and lay this present in front of him.”
Tobacco was brought to the demon ministers, male and female, who headed the
delegation,
And to the rest of the hundred thousand māra combatants and five hundred rākṣasa
evil beings,
Who convened in a meeting in the north of India. Tasks were allocated and
aspiration prayers made. They said,
“May the usage of this fruit of our tears spread throughout the world;
May all Gautama’s students and followers, man or woman, consume it.
Through this may their senses, clear at first,
See thoughts, and desire, aversion and ignorance increase!
May the mass of destructive emotions escalate!
May it destroy all the power of the sacred Dharma!
Finally, may it wipe out the teachings of Gautama,
And let the demonic factions of mental poisons explode!”
They made this aspiration prayer, and tobacco was distributed to the assembly,
And they all absorbed it through the nose.
Their destructive emotions rapidly increased and desire flared up,
And they progressively spread the practice throughout India and Tibet.
2
And you will slip into the Black Line hell or the Howling hell, or into the Swamp of
Putrefying Corpses.
When destructive emotions explode and people feed on this poison,
There is nothing the victorious ones of the three times can do—
That is why you need to give up tobacco.
Now, the powerful pith instruction to abstain from tobacco, the mara’s food.
You appear clearly as the teacher Vajrapāṇi.
Visualize Mañjuśrī in your right nostril, and Avalokiteśvara in the left.
Their rays of light invite all the buddhas and bodhisattvas—
In their compassion they grant their blessings and overcome all suffering,
They ignite the majestic great primordial wisdom,
All māras, losing their nerve, are overpowered, and negative thoughts are pacified.
Actualize this and recite that secret, essence mantra:
Oṃ vāgīśvari muṃ
Oṃ maṇi padme hūṃ
Oṃ vajrapāṇi hūṃ
Dü sin tamakha la maraya phaṭ1
If, with the power of empty recitation, you plant the nails of the generation phase,
Thoughts of the māra’s food will not so much as brush against your mind.
Practise this, and truth and falsehood will appear clearly to you.
3
harm.
May my compassionate emanations spread this teaching!
The lineage of the reading transmission for this text is as follows. The tertön passed it on
to Gyalse Kalzang Tenzin who in turn granted it to me, Chatral Sangye Dorje.
1. Tamakha (tha ma kha) is the Tibetan for tobacco. Dü (bdud) is māra, and sin
(srin) is rākṣasa. So the meaning of the last line of mantra is, ‘Avert māras,
rākṣasas, and tobacco!’ ↩
2. Ngawang Tenzin (ngag dbang bstan 'dzin, 1858–1914) alias Jikdral Tutop
Lingpa ('jigs bral mthu stobs gling pa) was one of Khenpo Ngawang Palzang’s
(ngag dbang dpal bzang, 1879–1940) main teachers. In his autobiography
Ngawang Palzang explains that Ngawang Tenzin was a student of the fourth
Katok Drimé Shyingkyong, Mingyur Tenpe Gyaltsen (mi 'gyur bstan pa'i rgyal
mtshan), but the translators of Wondrous Dance of Illusion: The Autobiography
of Khenpo Ngawang Palzang (Ithaca: Snow Lion, 2013) wonder whether this
Mingyur Tenpe Gyaltsen might have been the second or third Drimé
Shingkyong incarnation, rather than the fourth, Jigme Dechen Dorje, who was
born in 1899 (see p. 256, n. 64). ↩
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License.
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